E 



/3UrJ~. 



'Z- 




5 






V 11"^ ! , I 



L f :^ FROM AN Old Sv. 



Fl FT . 




M'm 



^T^m 



Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1873, by C. A. Mecaskey &Co. 
Phila, Pa., in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. 







'^^^^S^^^^ 



THE OLD CANOE. 

Arid the solemn owj with his dull "too-hoo,"' 
Nestles down on the side of the old canoe. 




ONGS TIDRIFT. 



GEMS FROM A^ OLD SCRAP BOOK 



IFCPTM i©llTB@Nl. 




Unconsidered Trifles. 



PHILADELPHIA: 

C. A. MECASKEY & CO, 

No. 908 Chestnut Street. 

1874, 



1 9-1 



-P^?> 



•• * 



COMPLIMENTS OF 

C. A. MECASKEY & CO. 

908 Chestnut Street, 



PHLLADELPHIA, 



v^ 



ANNOUNCEMENT. 



-«>o>«<< 



In presenting a new edition of Songs Adrift to our friends, 
we are guided entirely by the sentiments of those who have read the 
earlier issues. Our little book has been received with unexpected 
favor, and we trust it will continue to please. A number of changes 
have been made in the matter, and as an additional attraction we 
have inserted an original frontispiece, drawn expressly for us by 
Mr. A. F. Bunner. 



C. A. M. & Co. 



^'SONGS ADRIFT." 



-O-O^^OO- 



It is surprising how many really good and stirring poems go float- 
ing up and down the currents of the great sea of literature, with never 
an author to claim them, and never a publisher to gather them into a 
Volume. They take their start in a corner of a weekly paper, or deep 
in the recesses of a magazine, are scissored from one paper to another, 
and at last find quiet resting places in somebody's scrap-book. They 
are usually the one or two heart-stirring songs of a poet who is never 
able to match them afterwards, and who, in despair, abandons them to 
their fate ; but sometimes they are the isolated ones which the world se- 
lects to remember, while the volume containing their duller companions 
slumbers unread on a forgotten shelf; and sometimes they are the only 
songs which some master-mind of prose has permitted itself to sing; 
but in any case they have no home, no associations, no harbor of 
refuge— literary waifs on a sea which has shipwrecked their companions 
by thousands, they belong to the finder; and even the king can scarcely 
hope to apply to them the law of flotsam and jetsam. 



SONGS ADRIFT 



Mainly of this sort are the scraps collected in this little volume. 
A few of them are by well-known authors, a few more by rising ones, 
but the majority are to be credited to that convenient authority, "Mr. 
Anonymous." So far as we know, none of them— or but one or two, at 
most— are contained in a published edition of their author's works; 
and as we could name the writers of so few, we have deemed it best to 
withhold the author's name, even where it was known. 

The Poems are from a scrap-book, and are given here as they stood 
there, without order or arrangement, but just as the periodical currents 
drifted them in. Like the emotions they express, they will be found 
to relate to almost every phase of life and life's experience. Somebody 
will be grateful for each one of them; and to that somebody the one 
he or she likes best — and to all our friends the volume in general — is 
respectfully dedicated by 

Their Obedient Servants, 

C. A. M. & Co. 



m:E 'Om ^:?j^'-o:e. 




3^^^:£) 



HERE the rocks are gray and the shore is steep, 
And the waters below look dark and deep, 
Where the rugged pine in its gloomy pride 
Leans gloomily over the murky tide, 
Where the reeds and the rushes are tall and_ 

rank, ^ 

And the weeds grow thick on the winding 

bank, 
Where the shadow is heavy the whole day 

through, 
Lies at its moorings the old canoe. 



The useless paddles are idly dropped, 

Like a sea bird's wings that the storm hath lopped, 

And cr-ossed on the railing one o'er one, 

Like folded hands when the work is done ; 

While busily back and forth between 

The spider stretches his silvery screen. 

And the solemn owl, with his dull "too-hoo," 

Nestles down on the side of the old canoe. 



2* 



10 SONGS ADRIFT 



The stern half sunk in the slimy wave, 

Rots slowly away in its living grave, 

And the green moss creeps o'er its dull decay. 

Hiding the mouldering dust away, 

Like the hand that plants o'er the tomb a flower, 

Or the ivy that mantles a fallen tower ; 

While many a blossom of liveliest hue 

Springs up o'er the stern of the old canoe. 

The currentless waters are dead and still ; 
But the light winds play with the boat at will. 
And lazily in and out again, 
It floats the length of its rusty chain, 
Like the weary march of the hands of time, 
That meet and part at the noontide chime; 
And the shore is kissed at each turn anew 
By the dripping bow of the old canoe. 

Oh, many a time with a careless hand 
I have pushed away from the pebbly strand, 
And paddled down where the stream ran quick — 
Where the whirls were wild and the foam ran thick; 
And laughed as I leaned o'er the rocking side, 
And looked below in the broken tide. 
To see that the faces and boats were two, 
That were mirrored back from the old canoe. 



SONGS ADRIFT 



11 



But DOW, as I lean o'er the crumbling side, 

And look below in the sluggish tide, 

The face that I see is graver grown. 

And the laugh that I hear has a sober tone. 

And the hands that lent to the light skiff wings 

Have grown familiar with sterner things ; 

But I love to think of the hours that flew 

As I rocked where the whirls their wild spray threw, 

Ere the blossoms waved or the green grass grew 

O'er the mouldering stern of the old canoe. 




12 



SONGS ADRIFT 



'On t})e ^anks of tlje beautiful {{iver 

IKE a foundling in slumber the summer-day lay, 

On the crimsoning threshold of Even, 
And I thought that the glow from the "azure-arched" 
way, 
Was a glimpse of the coming of heaven. 
There together we sat by the beautiful stream ; 
We had nothing to do but to love and to dream 

In the days that have gone on before. 
These are not the same days, though they bear the 
same name 
With the ones I shall welcome no more ! 

But it may be the angels are calling them o'er, 

For a Sabbath and summer forever, 
When the years shall forget the Decembers they wore. 

And the shroud shall be woven, no, never! 
In a twilight like that, Jenny June for a bride, 
Oh, what more of the world could one wish for beside? 

As we gazed on the river enrolled, 
Till we heard, or we fancied, its musical tide. 

As it flowed through the gate-way of gold. 




SONGS ADRIFT 13 



"Jenny June," then I said, "let us linger no more 

On the banks of the beautiful river; 
Let the boat be unmoored, and be muffled the oar, 

And we'll steal into Heaven together. 
If the angel on duty our coming descries, 
You have nothing to do but throw off the disguise 

That you wore when you wandered with me, 
And the sentry shall say, ' Welcome back to the skies, 

We have long been a- waiting for thee.' " 

Oh, how sweetly she spoke ere she uttered a word. 

With that blush partly her's, partly Even's ; 
And that tone like the dream of a song we once heard, 

As she whispered, "that way is not Heaven's; 
For the river that riins by the realms of the blest 
Has no song in its ripple, no star on its breast — 

Oh, that river is nothing like this ! 
For it glides on in shadow, beyond the world's west, 

Till it breaks into beauty and bliss ! " 

I am lingering yet, but I linger alone, 

On the banks of the beautiful river; 
'Tis the TWIN of that day, but the wave where it shone, 

Bears the willow-tree's shadow forever ! 



m:b wfiir:E. 




g^^e:) 



ALF way ripe is the wavy wheat, 

Abroad in the fields where it stands breast 
high; 
Soft as a whisper, and strangely sweet, 

The breath of the wind as it wanders by ; 
"Bob White!" 
Hark ! whose is it, the Yoice I hear? 
Calling aloud in the tall grain near — 

"Bob White!" 



Hotter each day grows the warm June sun, 

A shade more purple the sky's deep blue. 
And the bright June roses have just begun 

To sprinkle their leaves with an ashen hue; 

"Bob White!" 
There it is calling, again and again, 
Sweet and clear from the amber grain — 

"Bob White!' 



SONGS ADRIFT 15 



" What does the little bird say, my son ?" 

The father asks of his fair haired boy, 
Where over the porch the wild vines run, 

And the humming bee murmurs his song of joy. 

•' Bob White ! " 
Sounding aloud as the voice draws nigh, 
And the innocent lips of the child reply — 

"Bob White!" 

One shrill note and a whirr of wings 

Away in a moment, flying low. 
As over the loose wall lightly spring 

The farmer lad with his rake and hoe ; 

"Bob White!" 
Whistles the boy, while his big black eyes 
Follow the flock wherever it flies — 

"Bob White!" 

f 
A soft, sleek coat of a darkish brown, 

And a speckled waistcoat of lighter shade, 
Passing to white where it reaches down. 
With breeches of chestnut trimly made; 

"Bob White!" 
This is he whom we hear repeat, 
All day long in the ripening wheat — 

"Bob White I" 



in SONGS A DRIFT 



Two half circles around the throat, 

One pale streak on his lordship's crown, 
And all over the back of his Quaker coat 
Paler streaks of a yellowish brown ; 

"Bob White!" 
This is he who fattens and thrives, 
Down in the wheat where he calls to his wives— 

"Bob White!" 

A famous Mormon is he, I'm told, 

Full of love for the softer sex ; 
With a heart like an eagle's, quick and bold, 
And a spirit fiery and easy to vex; 

"Bob White!" 
Is it his own or another's name 
That he keeps repeating always the same — 

"Bob White!" 

« 
A few dried leaves and some tufts of hay 

Under a tuft of sheltering grass ; 
Hid in a hollow out of the way, 

Where only by chance a foot may pass — 

" Bob White ! " 
Thus he calls now, the nest is made — 
Thus lie will call till the eggs are laid ! 

"Bob White!" 



SONGS ADRIFT 17 



Yellowish white the brittle shell, 

Speckled with brown like his own little breast, 
Watched, and tended, and guarded well, 
A dozen or more in the homely nest ; 

» Bob White ! " 
Far less frequent, and somewhat dry 
The Yoice of our friend, as the days go by, 

"Bob White!" 



A smart young fellow, his son and heir, 

Ready at once from the nest to roam ; 
Little of trouble and little of care 

Brings the boy to the mother at home ; 

" Bob White ! " 
Almost silenced the once clear tone. 
Now that the season of love is flown, 

" Bob White ! " 



There in the grass where the dew hangs damp. 

Ever watchful of any harm ; 
Back to back in a circular camp, 
Ready to rise. at the least alarm ; 

" Bob White ! " 
Sits from the time the twilight falls, 
All through the night, while no shrill throat calls 

" Bob White ! " 



By-and-by when the summer is dead, 

And the glowing hand of autumn weaves 
Gorgeous patterns of purple and red, 

With gold and brown in the orchard's leaves ;- 

"Bob White!" 
Down in the stubble piping low. 
No longer shall call as the bright days go— 

" Bob White ! " 




SONGS ADRIFT 



19 



na i^iKx I'oii m:e. 




UST fair enough to be pretty, 

Just gentle enough to be sweet, 

Just saucy enough to be witty, 
Just dainty enough to be neat. 

Just tall enough to be graceful. 
Just slight enough for a fay, 

Just dress enough to be tasteful. 
Just merry enough to be gay. 



Just tears enough to be tender, 

Just sighs enough to be sad, 
Tones soft enough to remember. 

Your heart through the cadence made glad. 



Just meek enough for submission, 
Just bold enough to be brave. 

Just pride enough for ambition, 

Just thoughtful enough to be grave. 



20 SONGS ADRIFT 



A tongue that can talk without harming, 
Just mischief enough to tease, 

Manners pleasant enough to be charming, 
That put you at once at your ease. 

Disdain for to put presumption, 

Sarcasm to answer a fool, 
Cool contempt shown to assumption, 

Proper dignity always the rule. 

Flights of fairy fancy ethereal, 
Devotion to science full paid, 

Stuflf of the sort of material. 

Poets and painters are made. 

Generous enough, and kind-hearted. 

Pure as the angels above ; 
0, from her may I never be parted, 

For such is the maiden I love. 




SONGS ADRIFT 



21 



XiiV:E WOIiTM 




HO shall judge a man from manners ? 
Who shall know him by his dress ? 

Paupers may be fit for princes, 
Princes fit for something less. 

Crumpled shirt and dirty jacket 
May beclothe the golden ore 

Of the humblest thoughts and feelings- 
Satin vests would do no more. 



There are springs of crystal nectar, 

Ever welling out of stone ; 
There are purple buds and golden, 

Hidden, crushed and overthrown ; 
God, who counts by souls, not dresses. 

Loves and prospers you and me. 
While he values thrones the highest, 

But as pebbles in the sea. 



SONGS ADRIFT 



Man, upraised above his fellows, 

Oft forgets his fellows then ; 
Masters, rulers, lords, remember — 

That your meanest hands are men- 
Men by labor, men by feeling, 

Men by thought, and men by fame. 
Claiming equal rights to sunshine. 

In man's ennobling name. 



There are foam-embroidered oceans. 

There are little reed-clad rills ; 
There are feeble, inch-high saplings, 

There are cedars on the hills : 
God, who counts by souls, not stations. 

Loves and prospers you and me ; 
For to him all vain distinctions 

Are as pebbles in the sea. 



Toiling hands alone are builders 

Of a nation's wealth or fame ; 
Titled laziness is pensioned. 

Fed and fattened on the same ; 
By the sweat of others' foreheads. 

Living only to rejoice, 
While the poor man's outraged freedom 

Vainly lifteth up its voice. 



Truth and justice are eternal, 

Born with loveliness and light, 
Secret wrongs shall never prosper 

While there is a sunny right ; 
God, whose world-heard voice is singing 

Boundless love to you and me, 
Sinks oppression with its titles, 

As the pebbles of the sea. 




24 



SONGS ADRIFT 



^O0MX2>^<} n-OM'E. 




BROTHERS and sisters growing old, 

Do you all remember yet, 
That home in the shade of the rustling trees, 

Where once the household met? 

Do you know how we used to come from school, 
Through summer's pleasant heat; 
V^With the yellow fennel's golden dust 
On our tired little feet ? 



And sometimes in an idle mood, 

We loitered by the way ; 
And stopped in the woods to gather flowers, 

And in the fields to play ? 



Till Avarned by the deep'ning shadows fall. 
That told of the coming night, 

We climbed on the top of the last long hill, 
And saw our home in sight ? 



SONGS ADRIFT 25 



And brothers and S'sters, older now, 

Than she whose life is o'er, 
Do you think of the mother's loving face, 

That looked from the open door? 

Alas, for the changing things of time; 

That form in the dust is low; 
And that loving home was hid from us, 

In the darkness, long ago ! 

And we have come to life's last hill. 
From which our weary eyes, 

Can almost look on that home that shines, 
Eternal in the skies. 

For that mother, who waited for us here, 

Wearing a smile so sweet, 
Now waits on the hills of Paradise, 

For her children's coming feet 1 




4* 



SONGS ADRIFT 



n:^yx:^<} :,dx oovivr^^-G 




EX'S play at courtiag, little wife- 
Forget these boys and girls, 

Ignore the wrinkles on our brows, 
The gray hair 'mid our curls. 



"Me, John, across the field you see, 
With Sunday-suit bedight; 

You at the glass push back your hair. 
And smooth your apron white. 



" You hum above your work, while loud 
And quick your heart beats on ; 

And yet unconscious look, as if 
There never was a John. 



'• Well, I am there : I dare not kiss 
The little hand I touch ; 

It seems, just sitting by your side, 
Almost one joy too much. 



SONGS ADRIFT 27 



" And, as your shining needles move, 

'Tis bliss enough to see 
The downcast lashes sometimes lift, 

To steal a glance at me. 

"The neighbors shy look in sometimes— 

I do not call them here ; 
I'd rather not, to tell the truth, 

Have anybody near. 

"The old folks bid a pleased good-night, 

And leave us two together — 
To think, and blush, and nothing say, 

Except, "Tis pleasant weather.' 

"But some way, by-and-by (how is't? 

I never could define,) 
My hand gets snuggling round your waist, 

And yours gets clasped in mine. 

"And some way, stranger still, your cheek 

Comes very near my own ; 
For thus I bend my head, to hear 

That bashful, whispering tone— 

" And then ''—wife nudged me— Close behind, 

Eyes opened wide to see. 
Our eldest stood — she's just the age 

Her mother married me. 



28 



SONGS ADRIFT 



i:fxsmovjs !di:e r-o-:^mnx 




F I should die to-night, 

My friends would look upon my quiet face 

Before they laid it in its resting place, 

And deem that death had left it almost fair ; 

And, laying snow-white flowers against my hair 

Would smooth it down with tearful tenderness, 

And fold my hands with lingering caress. 

Poor hands, so empty and so cold to-night! 



If I should die to-night, 
My friends would call to-mind, with loving thought, 
Some kindly deed the icy hand had wrought ; 
Some gentle word the frozen lips had said ; 
Errands on which the willing feet had sped— 
The memory of my selfishness and pride, 
My hasty words, would all be put aside, 

And so I should be loved and mourned to-night. 



SONGS ADRIFT 29 



If I should die to-night, 
Even hearts estranged would turn once more to me, 
Kecalling other days remorsefully. 
The eyes that chill me with averted glance 
Would lool^.upon me as of yore, perchance, 
And soften in the old, familiar way. 
For who could war with dumb, unconscious clay ? 
So I might rest, forgiven of all, to-night. 

Oh ! friends, I pray to-night, 
Keep not your kisses for my dead, cold brow. 
The way is lonely ; let me feel them now. 
Think gently of me ; I am travel worn. 
My faltering feet are pierced with many a thorn. 
Forgive, Oh ! hearts estranged, forgive, I plead ! 
When dreamless rest is mine I shall not need 

The tenderness for which I long to-night. 




Si:rxjEM:BM 




WEET is the voice that calls 

From babbling water-falls, 
In meadows where the downy seeds are flying 

And soft the breezes blow, 

And eddying come and go, 
In faded gardens where the rose is dying. 

Among the stubbled corn 
The blithe quail pipes at morn, 
The merry partridge drums in hidden places. 
And glittering insects gleam 

Above the reedy stream 
Where busy spiders spin their filmy laces. 



At eve cool shadows fall 

Across the garden wall, 
And on the clustered grapes to purple turning ; 

And pearly vapors lie 

Along the eastern sky 
Where the broad harvest-moon is redly burning. 



SONGS ADRIFT 31 

% 



Ah, soon on field and hill 

The winds shall whistle chill, 
And patriarch swallows call their flocks together 

To fly from frost and snow 

And seek for lands where blow 
The fairer blossoms of a balmier weather. 

The pollen-dusted bees 

Search for the honey-lees 
That linger in the last flowers of September ; 

W :f lie plaintive mourning doves 

Coo sadly to their loves 
Of the dead summer they so well remember. 

The cricket chirps all day, 

" O, fairest summer, stay ! " 
The squirrel eyes askance the chestnuts browning; 

The wild-fowl fly afar 

Above the foamy bar. 
And hasten southward ere the skies are frowning. 

Now comes a fragrant breeze 

Through the dark cedar trees, 
And round about my temples fondly lingers 

In gentle playfulness. 

Like to the soft caress 
Bestowed in happier days by loving fingers. 



32 



SONGS ADEIFT 



Yet, though a sense of grief 

Comes with the falling leaf, 
And memory makes the summer doubly pleasant, 

In all my autumn dreams, 

A future summer gleams. 
Passing the fairest glories of the present ! 




SONGS ADRIFT 



33 



:F:4XTfi 




HEER up, dear heart ! I know the way is weary, 
And the stones rough unto thy tender feet ; 
^ I know the walk is sad and dark and dreary, 

And seems so far until our pathways meet. 

Cheer up, dear love I Time's hand upon the dial, 

I know, so slowly marks the creeping hours. 

That thy heart faints beneath the wearying 

trial, 

As roses die awaiting summer showers. 



Cheer up, my own I I know thy life is lonely ; 

Lone as a night, with neither moon nor star; 
And 0, if I could cheer and soothe it only. 

By words that come thus to thee from afar ! 
If I can know, thy woman's faith, endering. 

Still lives beneath the darkness of that sky. 
Still dreams of joys, the heart to hope alluring, 

That e'en grow dearer as they seem to die. 



5* 



34 SONGS ADRIFT 



Cheer up, dear Love ! I know thy tears are falling, 

Would I were near to kiss them from thy cheek ! 
I know thy heart is faint, and fainter growing; 

Though not thy faith, and not thy love more weak. 
Cheer up, dear one ! the ocean waves are beating, — 

In vain against the rock far out at sea ; 
So let thy heart in proud resistance meeting. 

Conquer the fate that keeps me far from thee. 



,^11/f'^';'/ 




SONGS ADKIFT 



35 



^ad you ever a iJousin^ Tom ? 




Q^"^ 



AD you ever a cousin, Tom? 

Did your cousin happen to sing? 
Sisters we've all by the dozen, Tom, 

But a cousin's a different thing. 
There's something in a sister's lip, 

When you give her a good-night kiss, 
That savors "so much of relationship. 

That nothing occurs amiss. 
But a cousin's lip, if you once unite 

With yours in the quietest way. 
Instead of sleeping a wink that night, 

You'll be dreaming the following day. 



No one thinks any harm, Tom, 

With a cousin to see you talk. 
And no one feels an alarm, Tom, 

At a quiet cousinly walk. 
But, Tom, you'll find out what I happen to know, 

That such walks often grow into straying, 
And the voices of cousins are sometimes so low. 

Heaven only knows what they are saying. 



36 SONGS ADRIFT 



How again there happens so often, Tom, 

Soft pressure of hands and of fingers, 
And looks that are moulded to soften, Tom, 

And tones on which memory lingers. 
So that before the walk is half over, the strings 

Of your heart are all called into play, 
By the voice of those fair, divine, sisterly things 

In not quite the most brotherly way. 

And the voice of a sister may bring to you, Tom, 

Such notes as the angels woo. 
But I fear should your cousin sing to you, Tom, 

You'd take her for an angel too. 
For so curious a note is this note of theirs. 

That you'd fancy the voice that gave it. 
Was all the while singing the national airs, 

Instead of the Psalms of David. 

I once had a cousin that sang to me, Tom, 

And her name shall be nameless now, 
But the sound of that voice is still young, Tom, 

Though we are no longer so. 
'Tis folly to dream of a lover of green 

When there's not a leaf on the tree, 
But between singing and walking, that cousin has been- 

God forgive her— the ruin of me. 



SONGS ADRIFT 



37 



I'll :bu :Bi]^vTirui. 




'LL be beautiful ! " she said, 

Softly a quaint old love-song singing, 

Arching and nodding her pretty head, 

O ! she was so daintily bred ! 

Golden curls to her fair brow clinging, 
Voice so bird-like, so clear and ringing! 
Lips so dewy and red. 



" I'll be beautiful ! " she sung ; 

" Ruling my lovers with smiles and sighs, 
They shall say that jewels drop from my tongue, 
That of all the maidens I danced among 

None have such eloquent eyes ; 

I care not to be either witty or wise— 
From such tears are rung." 



" And I will be beautiful ! " said May, 
Lifting her soft blue eyes to heaven ; 

"Dear Lord Jesus, Thou art the way ! 

I will bs gentle in all I say, 

And pardon as I would be forgiven ; 

I'll strive to be purer, day by day. 

And in Thy strength— pray. 

"I will be beautiful— in my heart, 

Roses and lilies are fair, but fading: 
A chastened spirit is better than art 

To give young faces sweet tint and shading. 
These for my beauty— a voice whose tone 

Shall be to the sad like a song ; 
An eye as ready to sparkle alone 

As when in the brilliant throng ; 
A smile as bright for the household few 

As the many in courtly hall ; 
For a smile if 'tis happy is always new ; 

And a low voice pleaseth all. 
What matter if tresses or eye grows dull ! 
If the heart be holy 'tis beautiful." 



^^^^^J^^T^) 



SONGS ADRIFT 



39 



rn:E 'pjEmi:Fim jfm^. 




N a valley, centuries ago, 

Grew a little fern leaf, green and slender, 

Veining delicate, and fibers tender — 

Waving when the wind crept down so low : 
Bushes tall, and grass and moss grew round it ; 
Playful sunbeams darted in and found it, 
But no foot of man e'er came that way ; 
Earth was young and keeping holiday. 



Useless? Lost? There came a thoughtful man 
Searching nature's secrets far .and deep. 
From a fissure in a rocky steep 

He withdrew a stone on which there ran 
Fairy pencilings, a quaint design — 
Leafage, veining, flowers, clear and fine ; 
And the fern's life lay in every line, 
So, I think, God hides some lives away, 
Sweetly to surprise us the last day. 



40 



SONGS ADRIFT 



x:j^ :/^.:bs-:e:^'c:e. 




?J^^J[^|^^ ATCH her kindly, stars ; 
I 
I From the sweet protecting skies, 

I Follow her with tender eyes ; 

I 

I Look so lovingly that she 

Cannot choose but think of me ; 

Watch her kindly, stars ! 

Soothe her sweetly, night ; 
On her eyes, o'erwearied, press 
The tired lids, with light caress ; 
Let that shadowy hand of thine 
Ever in her dreams seem mine ; 

Soothe her sweetly, night ! 



Wake her gently, morn ; 
Let the notes of early birds 
Seem like Love's melodious words ; 
Every pleasant sound, my dear, 
When she wakes from sleep, should hear; 

Wake her gently, morn ! 



SONGS ADHIFT 



41 



Kiss her softly, winds ; 
Softly, that she may not miss 
Any sweet, accustomed bliss ; 
On her lips, her eyes, her face, 
Till I come to take your place ; 

Kiss and kiss her, winds ! 




«* 



42 



SONGS ADRIFT 



xn:E jjttz:e pje'Opz:e. 




DREARY place would be this earth 
Were there no little people in it ; 

The song of life would lose its mirth, 
Were there no children to begin it. 



V - No little forms like buds to grow, 

And make the admiring heart surrender ; 
No little hands on breast and brow, 

To keep the thrilling love-chords tender. 



No babe within our arms to leap, 

No little feet toward slumber tending ; 

No little knee in prayer to bend, 

Our lips to theirs the sweet words lending. 



What would the ladies do for work, 

Were there no pants or jackets tearing ; 

No tiny dresses to embroider : 

No cradle for their watchful caring? 



SONGS ADRIFT 43 



No rosy boys at wintry-morn, 

With satchel to the school-house hasting ; 
No merry shouts as home they rush ; 

No precious morsel for their tasting. 

Tall, grave, grown people at the door, 

Tall, grave, grown people at the table ; 

The men on business all intent. 

The dames lugubrious as they're able. 

The sterner souls would get more stern. 
Unfeeling natures more inhuman ; 

And men to stoic coldness turn, 

And woman would be less than woman. 

Life's song indeed would lose its charm, 
Were there no babies to begin it ; 

A doleful place this world would be, 
Were there no little people in it. 




44 



SONGS ADRIFT 



j^'Or li^-vwx^^ 




KNOW not what will befall me I God hangs a mist 

o'er my eyes ; 
And o'er each step of my onward path he makes new 

scenes to rise ; 
And every joy he sends me comes as a sweet and glad 

surprise. 

I see not a step before me as I tread in the days of 

the year ; 
But the Past is still in God's keeping ; the Future 

his mercy shall clear ; 
And what looks dark in the distance may brighten 

as I draw near. 



For perhaps the dreaded future has less bitterness than I think ; 
The Lord may sweeten the water before I stoop to drink ; 
Or, if Marah must be Marah, he will stand beside its brink. 



vSONGS ADRIFT - 45 



It may be there is waiting for the coming of my feet, 

Some gift of such rare blessedness, some joy so strangely sweet, 

That my lips can only tremble with the thanks I cannot speak. 

restful, blissful Ignorance I 'Tis blessed not to know ! 
It keeps me quiet in those arms which will not let me go, 
And hushes my soul to rest on the bosom which loves me so: 

So I go on, not knowing! I would not if I might ; 

1 would rather walk in the dark with God, than go alone in the light ; 
I would rather walk with him by faith than walk alone by sight. 

My heart shrinks back from trials which the Future may disclose, 

Yet, I never had a sorrow but what the dear Lord chose ; 

So I send the coming tears back with the whispered words, "He knows." 




46 



SONGS ADRIFT 




Jjeaves tlpat are Fairest 



EAVES that are fairest 

Soonest decay, 
Loved ones the rarest 

Soon pass away ; 
Smiles that are brightest 

Soonest grow cold, 
Tales that are lightest 

Soonest are told. 



But the leaf and the tale give us joy while they last, 
And the smile of a friend makes a joy of the past ; 
For memory preserves in its tender embrace 
The sunbeams of life as they flashed on his face. 



Fortunes the proudest 
Fly with the years, 

Laughter the loudest 
Softens to tears. 



SONGS ADRIFT 



47 



Joys the completest 

Last but an hour, 
Perfumes the sweetest 

Die with the flower. 

But why should we sigh for the joys that have fled, 
Or mcfuru the fond hopes that are lost with the dead? 
Fresh hopes and new joys coming seasons will bring. 
As perfumes will return with the roses of Spring. 




48 



SONGS ADRIFT 



ihO'O^^lBJ. 




OD be with you ! through my losing 
And my grieving, shall I say? 

Through my smiling and my hoping- 
God be with you, friends, to-day! 



Somewhere, on a shore of silver, 
(God be with you on the way !) 

In a sunlight sifted richly 

From a thousand skies of May. 



In the meanings of the sunrise, 
In the soul of summer rain, 

In the heart of purple hazes. 

We will not say Good-by again. 



But the tears dash through my dreaming, 

And the thing I fain would say, 
Falters into this— this only ; 

God be with you till that day ! 



SONGS ADEIFT 



49 



flow sm^ii^^ij:E. 




OW strange it will be, love, how strange when we 
two 
Shall be what all lovers become, 
You frigid and faithless, I cold and untrue, 
You thoughtless of me, and I careless of you, 
Our pet names grown rusty with nothing to do, 
Love's bright web unravelled, and rent, and worn 
through, 
And life's loom left empty — ah, hum! 
Ah, me, 
How strange it will be ! 



How strange it will be when the witchery goes, 

"Which makes me seem lovely to-day ; 
When your thought of me loses its couleur de rose. 
When every day serves some new fault to disclose. 
When you find I've cold eyes and an every day nose, 
And wonder you could for a moment suppose 
I was out of the commonplace way ; 
Ah, me, 
How strange it will be. 



50 



SONGS ADRIFT 



How strange it will be love— how strange when we meet, 

With just a chill touch of the hand ! 
W,hen my pulses no longer delightedly beat 
At the thought of your coming, the sound of your feet, 
When I watch not your going, far down the long street, 
When your dear, loving voice, now so thrillingly sweet, 
Grows harsh in reproach or command ; 
Ah, me, 
How strange it will be ! 

How strange it will be when we willingly stay 

Divided the weary day through ! 
Or, getting remotely apart as we may. 
Sit chilly and silent, with nothing to say. 
Or cooly converse on the news of the day 
In a wearisome, old married folks sort of way I 
I shrink from the picture ; don't you ? 
Ah, me. 
How strange it will be ! 



Dear love, if our hearts do grow torpid and 6ld, 

As so many others have done ; 
If we let our love perish with hunger and cold, 
If we dim all life's diamonds and tarnish its gold, 
If we choose to live wretched and die unconsoled 
'Twill be strangest of all things that ever were told 
As happening under the sun ! 
Ah, me. 
How strange it will be ! 



SONGS ADRIFT 



51 



One of the bweet 'Old 'C})ajiters 




NE of the sweet old chapters, 

After a day like this ; 
The day brought tears and trouble, 

The evening brings no kiss. 

No rest in the arms I long for — 
Rest and refuge and home ; 

Grieved, and lonely, and weary. 
Unto the Book I come. 



One of the sweet old chapters, 

The love that blossoms through 

His care of the birds and lilies, 
Out in the meadow dew. 



His evening lies soft around them 
Their faith is simply to be. 

O, hushed by the tender lesson. 
My God, let me rest in thee ! 



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m 



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017 189 546 7 




OCT 6 193T 



